On Fri, 28 Sep 2007 20:57:21 +1000, Daniel Land <daniel.land@gmail.com>
wrote:
> There's much debate between webmasters about whether access keys
> should or should not be implemented on a website. Access keys are very
> useful for many web users with accessibility needs, and many people
> depend on them being well implemented by websites; however, access
> keys interfere with some assistive technology devices
Actually, they often interfere with the browser itself, in a couple of
implementations that are unfortunately widespread but not very good (they
followed the advice given in the HTML 4 spec too carefully - and it wasn't
helpful advice as it turns out).
> By scripting your website on the server-side with a language like PHP,
> ASP, JSP...etc., in order to support access keys by the user's request
> (via GET or POST variables) but with access keys disabled by default,
> this entirely counters the negative effects of access keys whilst
> making limited but considerable use of the positives.
>
> Has anyone else implemented this strategy? What do you think about the
> idea?
Yes, this has been done before. UBAccess did it years ago, and others have
done it too. It seems like a reasonable workaround until the
implementations that cause the problems are fixed :(
cheers
Chaals
--
Charles McCathieNevile, Opera Software: Standards Group
hablo español - je parle français - jeg lærer norsk
chaals@opera.com http://snapshot.opera.com - Kestrel (9.5α1)